Hungary's Magyar visits Poland on first tour abroad as PM, seeks to reset EU ties


FILE PHOTO: Hungarian Prime Minister Peter Magyar walks as he opens former Prime Minister Viktor Orban's offices to the public in Budapest, Hungary, May 16, 2026. REUTERS/Bernadett Szabo/File Photo

WARSAW, May 19 (Reuters) - ⁠Hungary's Prime Minister Peter Magyar begins a two-day visit to Poland on Tuesday, his first tour abroad since taking office, ⁠a trip rich in symbolism for a leader who is seeking to steer his nation back towards the European ‌mainstream.

Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk, whom Magyar meets on Wednesday, led a pro-European coalition to power in Poland in 2023, mending ties with Brussels and unblocking billions of dollars in funds frozen over rule of law concerns.

It's a feat Magyar is seeking to emulate after he won a landslide victory over nationalist Viktor Orban in ​April, a result which Tusk portrayed as a blow to authoritarian rule and part ⁠of a shift in Central European politics away ⁠from eurosceptic nationalism.

Relations between Warsaw and Budapest had deteriorated into outright hostility as Tusk and Orban clashed over the Hungarian leader's confrontational ⁠approach ‌to Ukraine and warm relations with Russia.

The visit is seen primarily as a symbolic reset after a period of effectively frozen contacts, aimed at reopening dialogue on European issues and Ukraine, a Polish government official said.

"It is very clear that they want to ⁠restore relations with Poland to a very good level," the official added. "These are, ​I would say, gestures showing a return ‌to the best traditions of strong bilateral ties."

FROM SOUTH TO NORTH

Magyar's visit will take him across Poland, from Krakow ⁠in the south to the ​capital Warsaw and then the Baltic port city of Gdansk.

Magyar said on Monday he will travel by train to Warsaw on Tuesday evening on "a high-speed rail line built with EU funding - by the 'evil Brussels'," alluding to Orban's anti-EU rhetoric.

He said his decision to test out the Polish rail network came in ⁠the context of a desire to eventually build a high-speed link between ​Warsaw and Budapest.

Magyar will be accompanied by a host of ministers including Foreign Minister Anita Orban, Economy and Energy Minister Istvan Kapitany, Transport and Investment Minister David Vitezy and Defence Minister Romulusz Ruszin-Szendi.

"The areas of responsibility of the participating ministers naturally shape the direction of the talks," Magyar ⁠said.

ENERGY HIGH ON THE AGENDA

Magyar has pledged to end Hungary's dependence on Russian energy by 2035 and energy will be on the agenda in Poland.

"This is a priority issue for both countries, with the oil crisis being a major challenge," Magyar said.

Warsaw plans to offer Budapest access to U.S. LNG via a new Gdansk terminal due to start operations in 2028, a source with knowledge of the matter ​said. Orlen has already been selling U.S. LNG to Ukraine.

Warsaw also plans to discuss support of ⁠Ukraine, as well as the future framework of cooperation in the Visegrad group of central European nations, officials said.

Hungary's government wants Poland's backing in ​talks on unblocking EU funds, as both countries had similar rule-of-law disputes.

"The decision has ‌not yet been taken and will clearly be political as well ​as procedural, which is why this backing is crucial for Budapest," said Wojciech Przybylski of the Visegrad Insight think-tank.

(Reporting by Barbara Erling and Marek Strzelecki in Warsaw, Gergely Szakacs in Budapest, Additional reporting by Alan Charlish; Editing by Raju Gopalakrishnan)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

Others Also Read